TikTok's algorithm cares less about exact posting time and more about how a video performs in its first hour — but posting when your audience is actually online still gives you a head start on that early engagement window.
Early evening (6-9pm) tends to be the strongest general window, when people are winding down and scrolling more passively. Lunchtime (11am-1pm) is a solid secondary window for many accounts.
Weekend posting behaves differently — engagement often spikes later in the day since routines shift, so testing Saturday and Sunday afternoon slots separately from weekday patterns is worth doing.
Posting frequency matters more than most people expect: accounts posting 3-5 times a week tend to give the algorithm more data points to learn from than accounts posting once every week or two.
If your videos are timed well but still aren't gaining traction, the issue is usually reach, not scheduling — which is exactly the gap a TikTok growth service is designed to close.
Skip the trial and error — let Dr Boost USA handle the growth side while you focus on content.